Using Gesture Recognizers

Gesture recognizers are a powerful and easy to use tool for handling user gestures like tap or pinch and performing actions like triggering animations or view changes. This is a quick guide for the steps in setting up gesture recognizers.

Gesture Recognizer Options

There are many builtin gesture recognizers in iOS, and you can also create your own. Choose one from the following list.

UITapGestureRecognizer: Can be configured with the number of required taps to handle single, double, or more taps.

UILongPressGestureRecognizer: Can be configured with the required delay to be considered a long press. Defaults to 0.5 s.

UIPanGestureRecognizer

UIPinchGestureRecognizer: Used for pinch in and pinch out, this gesture recognizer continuously outputs to a scale property as the user moves their finger.

UIScreenEdgePanGestureRecognizer: Can be configured with which edge to detect pans from. Only detects pan movements that begin from the specified edge.

Add and Configure a Gesture Recognizer in Storyboard

Step 1: Choose a Gesture Recognizer

Choose a Gesture Recognizer from the Object Library based on the functionality your app needs.

Step 2: Drag and Drop a Gesture Recognizer into your View

Drag a Gesture recognizer from the Object Library and drop it onto the View you want the Gesture to be attached to.

NOTE: You can see which view the Gesture Recognizer is attached to by ctrl + Clicking on the Gesture Recognizer in the Document Outline.

Step 3: Create an Action for your Gesture Recognizer

Ctrl-drag from your Gesture Recognizer to the ViewController swift file to create an action. It's often easier to drag from the Gesture Recognizer in the Document Outline.

NOTES:

Be sure to change the type from AnyObject to the specific Gesture Recognizer you are using. i.e. UIPanGestureRecognizer, etc..

Make sure the view you attached the gesture to has User Interaction Enabled

Programmatically Add and Configure a Gesture Recognizer

Step 1: Implement the event handler method

When the gesture recognizer detects the gesture, it will call the event handler method on the target. Declare the method you want called by the gesture recognizer.

Gesture recognizers call the same selector as it transitions through various states. For example, a pan gesture recognizer calls the selector when the user first touches down on the view, and then it calls the selector repeatedly as the user drags their finger across the screen, and finally it calls the selector one last time when the user lifts their finger off the screen.

Example: Tap gesture recognizer

funcdidTap(sender:UITapGestureRecognizer){letlocation=sender.location(in:view)// User tapped at the point above. Do something with that if you want.}

-(IBAction)didTap:(UITapGestureRecognizer*)sender{CGPointlocation=[senderlocationInView:self.view];// User tapped at the point above. Do something with that if you want.
}

Example: Pinch gesture recognizer

funcdidPinch(sender:UIPinchGestureRecognizer){// get the scale value from the pinch gesture recognizerletscale=sender.scale}

Example: Screen edge pan gesture recognizer

funcdidScreenEdgePan(sender:UIScreenEdgePanGestureRecognizer){// Do something when the user does a screen edge pan.}

Step 2: Instantiate the gesture recognizer

It is common to create the gesture recognizers in the viewDidLoad() method, as shown below. After you create the gesture recognizer, attach it to the view you want to detect gestures on.

Example: Tap gesture recognizer

// The didTap: method will be defined in Step 3 below.lettapGestureRecognizer=UITapGestureRecognizer(target:self,action:#selector(didTap(sender:)))// Optionally set the number of required taps, e.g., 2 for a double clicktapGestureRecognizer.numberOfTapsRequired=2// Attach it to a view of your choice. If it's a UIImageView, remember to enable user interactionyourView.isUserInteractionEnabled=trueyourView.addGestureRecognizer(tapGestureRecognizer)

// Here we use the method didPan(sender:), which we defined in the previous step, as the action.
UITapGestureRecognizer*tapGestureRecognizer=[[UITapGestureRecognizeralloc]initWithTarget:selfaction:@selector(didTap:)];// Optionally set the number of required taps, e.g., 2 for a double click
tapGestureRecognizer.numberOfTapsRequired=2;// Attach it to a view of your choice. If it's a UIImageView, remember to enable user interaction
[self.viewsetUserInteractionEnabled:YES];[self.viewaddGestureRecognizer:tapGestureRecognizer];

Example: Pan gesture recognizer

// Here we use the method didPan(sender:), which we defined in the previous step, as the action.letpanGestureRecognizer=UIPanGestureRecognizer(target:self,action:#selector(didPan(sender:)))// Attach it to a view of your choice. If it's a UIImageView, remember to enable user interactionyourView.isUserInteractionEnabled=trueyourView.addGestureRecognizer(panGestureRecognizer)

Pinch Gesture Recognizer

Rotation Gesture Recognizer

Other Gesture Recognizer Tasks

Below are some common tasks that you might have with gesture recognizers.

Using Simultaneous Gesture Recognizers

By default, it won't work if you add multiple gesture recognizers to the same view. In order to do that, you have to specifically enable it.

Step 1: Set the Gesture Recognizer delegate

For example, if you want to use a pinch and rotate gesture recognizer simultaneously, choose either the pinch or the rotate gesture recognizer (it doesn't matter which one). If you created the gesture recognizer in Interface Builder, create an IBOutlet for it by Ctrl-dragging from the nib.

pinchGestureRecognizer.delegate=self

Step 2: Implement the Gesture Recognizer protocol

Go to the header file of the view controller and add UIGestureRecognizerDelegate to the list of protocols, as shown below.

Now the pinch and scale gesture recognizers should work simultaneously.

Use Case: Slide Out Tray

Slide out trays, Hamburger menus, and any other view you want to move by sliding your finger can be configured using a UIPanGesture Recognizer.

The following steps describe the process of creating a vertically sliding Tray. If you would like to make a Hamburger style horizontally sliding View, use the same concepts described below, but use the x-components of the translation in place the y-components. If you want a view that can be panned in all directions, use both x and y-components of the translation.

Step 3: Define a Variable to Hold the Initial Position of the View

Define an Instance Variable that can be accessed throughout the View Controller. We define these variables at the top of the ViewController Swift file, right above the viewDidLoad method.

vartrayOriginalCenter:CGPoint!

Step 4: Make the Tray Draggable

The code to make the Tray draggable will go inside our didPanTray method.
NOTE: If you created your Gesture Recognizer and added an Action in Storyboard, the method will be proceeded by @IBAction.

@IBActionfuncdidPanTray(sender:UIPanGestureRecognizer){}

Within the didPanTray method, we want to access the translation property of the UIPanGestureRecognizer and store it in a variable. This will tell us how far our finger has moved from the original "touch-down" point as we drag. We will also print the translation value to the console to get a feel for what it means. You should see that the translation is a CGPoint with values for the x and y components.

5: Animate Tray to Open or Closed Positions

When a user stops panning the Tray, we want the tray to animate to an up or down position. We will infer that if the users last gesture movement was downward, they intend to close the tray to it's down position. Conversely, if they are NOT panning down, they must be panning up, and intend to open the tray to it's up position.

We can tell which way a user is panning by looking at the gesture property, velocity. Like translation, velocity has a value for both x and y components. If the y component of the velocity is a positive value, the user is panning down. If the y component is negative, the user is panning up.

Since we are focusing on the user's last gesture movement, we will check for the velocity in the .ended condition of our gesture state conditional statement.

Define Instance variables to store the tray's position when it's "up" and "down" as well as the offset amount that the tray will move down when it is in it's down position.

vartrayDownOffset:CGFloat!vartrayUp:CGPoint!vartrayDown:CGPoint!

Within the viewDidLoad method, assign values to the trayDownOffset, trayUp and trayDown variables . The trayDownOffset will dictate how much the tray moves down. 160 worked for my tray, but you will have to adjust this value to accommodate the specific size of your tray.

Back in your didPanTray(_:) method, within the gesture state, .ended, create a conditional statement to check the y component of the velocity. In the case that the tray is moving down, animate the tray position to the trayDown point, otherwise, animate it towards the trayUp point. Animating View Properties

Step 4: Make the Image View Scalable

Access the scale parameter of the Pinch Gesture Recognizer and store it in a constant.

Access the view that was pinched and store it in a constant.

sender.view returns a generic UIView so we need to specify that we are working with a UIImageView using as! UIImageView.

Store the previous transform state of the imageView in a constant.

Modify the scale component of the imageView's transform property.

NOTE: We use CGAffineTransformScale instead of CGAffineTransformMakeScale. This is because CGAffineTransformScale allows us to add to the previous transform state as an argument, previousTransfrom whereas CGAffineTransformMakeScale will overwrite it completely. Combining Transforms

Resetting the scale is necessary because we are adding the scale to the previousTransform each time the method is called. If we didn't reset the scale, each time around the scale that was added to the previousTransform would be doubled and our Image View would scale out of control! But don't take my word for it, run the app without resetting the scale back to 1 and see what happens!